Global phylogeny of Treponema pallidum lineages reveals recent expansion and spread of contemporary syphilis.
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Authors
Cole, Michelle J
Pitt, Rachel
Crucitti, Tania
Ewens, Michael
Grankvist, Anna
Guiver, Malcolm
Kenyon, Chris R
Kularatne, Ranmini
Arando, Maider
Molini, Barbara J
Page, Emma E
Petrovay, Fruzsina
Rietmeijer, Cornelis
Rowley, Dominic
Shokoples, Sandy
Sweeney, Emma L
Taiaroa, George
Wennerås, Christine
Whiley, David M
Hughes, Gwenda
Unemo, Magnus
Krajden, Mel
Morshed, Muhammad G
Fifer, Helen
Publication Date
2021-12Journal Title
Nat Microbiol
ISSN
2058-5276
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Volume
6
Issue
12
Pages
1549-1560
Language
eng
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Beale, M. A., Marks, M., Cole, M. J., Lee, M., Pitt, R., Ruis, C., Balla, E., et al. (2021). Global phylogeny of Treponema pallidum lineages reveals recent expansion and spread of contemporary syphilis.. Nat Microbiol, 6 (12), 1549-1560. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41564-021-01000-z
Description
Funder: Queensland Government
Abstract
Syphilis, which is caused by the sexually transmitted bacterium Treponema pallidum subsp. pallidum, has an estimated 6.3 million cases worldwide per annum. In the past ten years, the incidence of syphilis has increased by more than 150% in some high-income countries, but the evolution and epidemiology of the epidemic are poorly understood. To characterize the global population structure of T. pallidum, we assembled a geographically and temporally diverse collection of 726 genomes from 626 clinical and 100 laboratory samples collected in 23 countries. We applied phylogenetic analyses and clustering, and found that the global syphilis population comprises just two deeply branching lineages, Nichols and SS14. Both lineages are currently circulating in 12 of the 23 countries sampled. We subdivided T. p. pallidum into 17 distinct sublineages to provide further phylodynamic resolution. Importantly, two Nichols sublineages have expanded clonally across 9 countries contemporaneously with SS14. Moreover, pairwise genome analyses revealed examples of isolates collected within the last 20 years from 14 different countries that had genetically identical core genomes, which might indicate frequent exchange through international transmission. It is striking that most samples collected before 1983 are phylogenetically distinct from more recently isolated sublineages. Using Bayesian temporal analysis, we detected a population bottleneck occurring during the late 1990s, followed by rapid population expansion in the 2000s that was driven by the dominant T. pallidum sublineages circulating today. This expansion may be linked to changing epidemiology, immune evasion or fitness under antimicrobial selection pressure, since many of the contemporary syphilis lineages we have characterized are resistant to macrolides.
Keywords
Anti-Bacterial Agents, Drug Resistance, Bacterial, Genome, Bacterial, Humans, Macrolides, Phylogeny, Syphilis, Treponema pallidum
Sponsorship
NIAID NIH HHS (R01 AI042143, R01 AI123196)
Medical Research Council (MR/V027956/1)
U.S. Department of Health & (R01 AI123196, R01 AI42143)
Department of Health | National Health and Medical Research Council (1174555)
Wellcome Trust (206194)
DH | NIHR | Programme Development Grants (NIHR200125)
National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) (NIHR200125)
European and Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership (RIA2018D-249)
Identifiers
PMC8612932, 34819643
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41564-021-01000-z
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/332450
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